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Experimental Therapeutics

Preferential Cytotoxicity of Cells Transduced with Cytosine Deaminase Compared to Bystander Cells after Treatment with 5-Flucytosine

Theodore S. Lawrence, Alnawaz Rehemtulla, Emily Y. Ng, Melinda Wilson, James E. Trosko and Philip L. Stetson
Theodore S. Lawrence
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Alnawaz Rehemtulla
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Emily Y. Ng
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Melinda Wilson
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James E. Trosko
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Philip L. Stetson
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DOI:  Published June 1998
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Abstract

In vitro experiments from our laboratory and others have suggested that herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (HSV-TK)/ganciclovir (GCV) gene therapy depends on gap junctional intercellular communication (GJIC) to produce a strong bystander effect. Furthermore, we have shown that cells transduced with HSV-TK can be protected from GCV-mediated toxicity by GJIC with bystander cells. We wished to determine whether GJIC affected either the bystander or protective effect of the cytosine deaminase (CD)/5-flucytosine (5-FC) gene therapy approach, in which CD converts 5-FC to 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). To test this, we designed a coculture system using communication-competent WB rat hepatocytes and a noncommunicating subclone (aB1), which were transduced with CD and with antibiotic resistance genes so that we could independently determine the survival of the CD-containing or bystander cells. We found that, compared to the HSV-TK/GCV strategy, bystander killing resulting from treatment with CD/5-FC does not depend on GJIC. However, our most striking finding was that both communication-competent and -incompetent CD-transduced cells were preferentially killed, by a factor of up to 500, compared to bystander cells. The lesser dependence of the CD/5-FC system on GJIC, combined with the finding that most cancer cells lack the capacity for GJIC, suggest that the CD/5-FC system may be superior to the HSV-TK/GCV approach for gene therapy. However, the premature death of the CD-transduced 5-FU “factory” suggests that other strategies may be necessary to produce a sufficient quantity of 5-FU for a duration long enough to produce permanent tumor regression.

Footnotes

  • ↵1 Supported by NIH Grants PO1 CA42761 (to T. S. L.) and RO1 CA21104 (to J. E. T.).

  • ↵2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Michigan, 1500 East Medical Center Drive, UH-B2C490, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-0010. Phone: (313) 647-9955; Fax: (313) 763-7371; E-mail: tsl@umich.edu.

  • Received December 22, 1997.
  • Accepted April 16, 1998.
  • ©1998 American Association for Cancer Research.
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June 1998
Volume 58, Issue 12
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Preferential Cytotoxicity of Cells Transduced with Cytosine Deaminase Compared to Bystander Cells after Treatment with 5-Flucytosine
Theodore S. Lawrence, Alnawaz Rehemtulla, Emily Y. Ng, Melinda Wilson, James E. Trosko and Philip L. Stetson
Cancer Res June 15 1998 (58) (12) 2588-2593;

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Preferential Cytotoxicity of Cells Transduced with Cytosine Deaminase Compared to Bystander Cells after Treatment with 5-Flucytosine
Theodore S. Lawrence, Alnawaz Rehemtulla, Emily Y. Ng, Melinda Wilson, James E. Trosko and Philip L. Stetson
Cancer Res June 15 1998 (58) (12) 2588-2593;
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